Salvador Borrego

Borrego Salvador Escalante ( Mexico City , 24 of April of 1915 ) is a journalist and writer Mexican , leading exponent of historical revisionism about the Holocaust of Nazi Germany in their country. 1 He was technical director of 37 newspapers and founding director of several of them. He has published 53 books in the fields of Military History , Politics , Economics , Sociology , Journalism , Philosophy and Religion , texts that have been strongly criticized and been accused of anti – Semitism because it places the international Jewish capital and the Zionist ideology as the cause Of World War II . Together with Joaquín Bochaca, he is considered one of the first representatives of the historical revisionism of Spanish speech [ citation needed ] . It has been considered by some critics and readers as an apologist and sympathizer of fascism 2 .

Career

Salvador Borrego studied law degree, History, Philosophy, Economy. He studied Sociology, History, Economics and Journalism and during his youth he did military studies.

He worked from 1936 to 1965 as a reporter, editorial secretary and editor in the Mexican newspapers Excélsior and Últimas Noticias . He was an adviser, founder of The Sun of Guadalajara, The Sun of Mexico, The Sun of San Luis Potosí, The Sun of Durango, The Sun of Aguascalientes; (1965-1974) of the ” Garcia Valseca ” chain (37 newspapers) owned by the businessman José García Valseca . Founder (1949) and director (1949-1955) of the Theoretical-Practical Academy of Journalism “García Valseca”. In addition, he was professor of journalism at the Mexican Women’s University, honorary president of Mexicanos Defraudados, AC and wrote monthly articles in “The Combat Sheet” for 32 years.

National Socialist sympathizer

Holocaust denier, one according to several interviews published on the Internet, [ citation ] started sympathizing with National Socialism from 1937, after seeing a propagandistic manipulation of press information in order to mislead the reader. Borrego then worked in the newspaper ” Excélsior ” where, he says, he witnessed a partial internal handling of the news about Nazi Germany that favored the allies . He states that he followed the course of events day by day before the war began, and that it became increasingly apparent that there were contradictions between the approaches of one side and the other.

In one of the interviews, Borrego states that in Mexico a group of advertisers had been formed, headed by a man named Jackes or Jacques Sustel , who warned of their intention to withdraw their publicity from the Excelsior House, for allegedly favoring the Nazis. Latest news was the first publication from which such advertising was withdrawn, being the newspaper that first published the events of Europe. The then director of the newspaper, Miguel Ordorica , founder of the latest news , asked Mr. Sustel to spend a morning in the newsroom to examine for himself how the newspaper was made. Sustel accepted; He was shown the messages coming from the Associated Press based in New York . Mr. Ordorica said to Mr. Sustel: ” You, in your commercial warehouse, display the merchandise that most attracts the attention of your buyers.” The most important news is on the front page, if they deserve it Even put eight columns, “and added:” The war is not won in Mexico, but in Europe . ” It is known that the group of advertisers managed to cancel the newspaper’s advertising. Ordorica was removed from the address.

With the new nationalist tendencies in Europe and after the fall of the Soviet Union, this author is being reviewed not only on its ideological basis, but on a more intellectual basis.

Works

Transcending Journalism (1951) (Text used in journalism schools)

World Defeat (1953), 630 pages. (Capital work of the author, centered on the origins, development and consequences of World War II, prolonged since the second edition by the Mexican philosopher José Vasconcelos , who was known for his interest and sympathy for Nazi Germany.In this prologue he wrote: ” It’s one of the most important books ever published in America .”